I need some help settling a dispute with my English Composition teacher. Actually, it's not even a dispute at this point. We both had to admit to uncertainty and/or ignorance on this one. I suppose I should say I need help resolving a question of grammar.
Consider two sentences:
- Speaking only under the condition of anonymity, a State Department official this week revealed that North Korea totally sucks.
- After relating an anecdote about his own experiences, Bob dove straight into the heart of the matter.
The central question is whether either of these sentences exhibits a mix of present and past tense. I argue that they do not. At issue is the use of present participles. Of course, present participles show up in progressive/continuous English verb conjugations, including those which are clearly past tense. For instance:
Bob is speaking. (present progressive)
Bob was speaking. (past progressive)
Bob would have been speaking. (past perfect progressive)
Bob will have been speaking. (future perfect progressive)
That isn't the case in either of the given sentences, however.
In sentence 1, my claim is that "speaking" is simply a participle acting as an adjective. It introduces the participle phrase "speaking only under the condition of anonymity", which modifies the subject of the sentence, "official". It further describes the subject at the moment the verb "revealed" occurred.
In sentence 2, "relating an anecdote [...]," is a gerund phrase. In this case, the gerund (participle acting as a noun) "relating" takes a direct object, "anecdote", which is then itself modified by a prepositional phrase ("about his personal experiences"). This exhibits the verb-like behavior of participles more than in sentence 1. Nevertheless, "relating an anecdote [...]," is definitely a gerund, acting as the noun object of the preposition "after". The entire phrase "After relating [...]," is a prepositional phrase which modifies the verb "dove" (answering "when?").
This
sentence diagrammer has difficulty diagramming sentence 1 (lol @ "Korea | sucks | that"), and patently refuses to diagram anything as complicated as sentence 2. However, feeding it a couple simpler, but structurally identical sentences seems to confirm my analysis. Try:
- Sighing inwardly, Bob agreed.
- After eating breakfast, Bob jogged.
Ok, so that's all fine and good, but we're still just talking about structure. It doesn't really answer the question of tense. Does a participle-as-participle really have tense? What about a gerund? I would say not, which renders the entire question rather meaningless. Then again, as near as my googling can determine, gerunds
do have tense in German, and I would strongly suspect that this is where we got them from. I get conflicting answers on whether they have tense in English. Even so, I would guess that they owe their morphology to the progressive verb conjugations. Being coupled to clearly past-tense constructions as they are, any implication of tense would be (in this case) past progressive.
That said, they do seemingly have voice, and it's clearly passive in these examples. So I may be "guilty" of using passive voice -- IMHO there is such a thing as appropriate use of passive voice, and this is one of them -- but I don't think I'm guilty of mixing tenses.
Thoughts? I'd especially like to hear from Khross on this one.